Declining a number. Polish declination grammar.

I paid for a Polish translation and have an issue with a sentence in it. Frustratingly, the translator rendered the following sentence thus:

"Czy Mel Brooks stworzył postać Agenta 86 po spotkaniu z Tobą?"Meaning in English: "Did Mel Brooks get the inspiration for Agent Eighty-Six after he met you?"The immediate problem with the translation is that the character is speaking, so "86" is useless to me since one cannot speak digits.

I am having the very devil of a time trying to render that number in spoken form.Thus, my question:

I have gathered that "Agenta" is the accusative-masculine form. How would I render ossiemdziessiąt sześć in the accusative-masculine? Or, if "Agenta" is not, in fact, the accusative-masculine, what case is it, and what form would ossiemdziessiąt sześć then take?

I paid for a Polish translation and have an issue with a sentence in it

You should probably contact the translator. I'm always glad when clients aske me about details I might have gotten wrong (it happens to all translators) and if the translator is a real professional they should be glad to help fix the problem.

Well, after I received the final two translations I had another question relating to a French language issue. I asked, and a week later they have not responded in any manner :( They are not likely to get any further business from me as a result.

So, in this case I am looking for an answer on my own as likely any question I ask will go ignored.

Numeralia in Polish were a positive nightmare for me in the beginning, much I suppose are our myriad tenses for Poles and others:-)

Still now, when I'm posting numbers here in Polish, certainly if writing a formal e-mail to Poland, I'm not ashamed to admit that I continue to have to consult my Szober "Gramatyka jezyka polskiego" for reliable assistance, or my Swan!